Star-Telegram

On a day of graduation­s, college protests mostly silent

- BY SHAILA DEWAN, HOLLY SECON, LEAH SMALL AND ROBERT CHIARITO

At the University of California, Berkeley, hundreds of soon-to-be graduates rose from their seats in protest, chanting and disrupting their commenceme­nt. At Virginia Commonweal­th University, about 60 graduates in caps and gowns walked out during Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s speech. At the University of Wisconsin, a handful of graduates stood with their backs to their chancellor as she spoke.

After weeks of tumult on college campuses over pro-Palestinia­n protests, many administra­tors prepared themselves for disruption­s at graduation­s Saturday. And although there were demonstrat­ions – most noisily, perhaps, at UC Berkeley – ceremonies at several universiti­es unfolded without major incident. Many students who protested did so silently.

Anticipati­ng possible disruption­s, university administra­tors had increased their security or taken various measures, including dismantlin­g encampment­s, setting aside free speech zones, canceling student speeches and issuing admission tickets.

Some administra­tors also tried to reach agreements with encampment organizers. The University of Wisconsin said it had reached a deal with protesters to clear the encampment in return for a meeting to discuss the university’s investment­s.

Some students, too, were on edge about their big day – many missed their high school graduation­s four years ago because of the COVID-19 pandemic and did not want to repeat the experience.

In 2020, David Emuze and his mother had watched his high school graduation “ceremony,” a parade of senior photos set to music on Zoom, from their living room in Springfiel­d, Illinois. This time, he and his classmates at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign heard that other schools, including the University of Southern California and Columbia University, had canceled their main-stage commenceme­nts altogether because of campus unrest.

But on Saturday morning, Emuze donned his electric-blue mortarboar­d and orange sash, and his mother watched live from the audience as he received his bachelor’s degree in public health. “It was a touching, peaceful, inspiring and motivation­al ceremony,” he said, with a note of relief in his voice.

He said the keynote speaker, Jeanne Gang, an architect and University of Illinois alum, had hit just the right note. She acknowledg­ed that “we all know about what’s going on in the world right now,” but said it was a time to come together and celebrate achievemen­ts.

 ?? JIM WILSON NYT ?? Graduates gather before a graduation ceremony Saturday at the University of California, Berkeley, in Berkley, Calif.
JIM WILSON NYT Graduates gather before a graduation ceremony Saturday at the University of California, Berkeley, in Berkley, Calif.

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